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Data Mining Classification: Alternative Techniques

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1 Data Mining Classification: Alternative Techniques
Lecture Notes for Chapter 5 Introduction to Data Mining by Tan, Steinbach, Kumar © Tan,Steinbach, Kumar Introduction to Data Mining /18/

2 Rule-Based Classifier
Classify records by using a collection of “if…then…” rules Rule: (Condition)  y where Condition is a conjunctions of attributes y is the class label LHS: rule antecedent or condition RHS: rule consequent Examples of classification rules: (Blood Type=Warm)  (Lay Eggs=Yes)  Birds (Taxable Income < 50K)  (Refund=Yes)  Evade=No

3 Rule-based Classifier (Example)
R1: (Give Birth = no)  (Can Fly = yes)  Birds R2: (Give Birth = no)  (Live in Water = yes)  Fishes R3: (Give Birth = yes)  (Blood Type = warm)  Mammals R4: (Give Birth = no)  (Can Fly = no)  Reptiles R5: (Live in Water = sometimes)  Amphibians

4 Application of Rule-Based Classifier
A rule r covers an instance x if the attributes of the instance satisfy the condition of the rule R1: (Give Birth = no)  (Can Fly = yes)  Birds R2: (Give Birth = no)  (Live in Water = yes)  Fishes R3: (Give Birth = yes)  (Blood Type = warm)  Mammals R4: (Give Birth = no)  (Can Fly = no)  Reptiles R5: (Live in Water = sometimes)  Amphibians The rule R1 covers a hawk => Bird The rule R3 covers the grizzly bear => Mammal

5 Rule Coverage and Accuracy
Coverage of a rule: Fraction of records that satisfy the antecedent of a rule Accuracy of a rule: Fraction of records that satisfy both the antecedent and consequent of a rule (Status=Single)  No Coverage = 40%, Accuracy = 50%

6 How does Rule-based Classifier Work?
R1: (Give Birth = no)  (Can Fly = yes)  Birds R2: (Give Birth = no)  (Live in Water = yes)  Fishes R3: (Give Birth = yes)  (Blood Type = warm)  Mammals R4: (Give Birth = no)  (Can Fly = no)  Reptiles R5: (Live in Water = sometimes)  Amphibians A lemur triggers rule R3, so it is classified as a mammal A turtle triggers both R4 and R5 A dogfish shark triggers none of the rules

7 Characteristics of Rule-Based Classifier
Mutually exclusive rules Classifier contains mutually exclusive rules if the rules are independent of each other Every record is covered by at most one rule Exhaustive rules Classifier has exhaustive coverage if it accounts for every possible combination of attribute values Each record is covered by at least one rule

8 From Decision Trees To Rules
Rules are mutually exclusive and exhaustive Rule set contains as much information as the tree

9 Rules Can Be Simplified
Initial Rule: (Refund=No)  (Status=Married)  No Simplified Rule: (Status=Married)  No

10 Effect of Rule Simplification
Rules are no longer mutually exclusive A record may trigger more than one rule Solution? Ordered rule set Unordered rule set – use voting schemes Rules are no longer exhaustive A record may not trigger any rules Use a default class

11 Advantages of Rule-Based Classifiers
As highly expressive as decision trees Easy to interpret Easy to generate Can classify new instances rapidly Performance comparable to decision trees

12 Instance-Based Classifiers
Store the training records Use training records to predict the class label of unseen cases

13 Instance Based Classifiers
Examples: Rote-learner Memorizes entire training data and performs classification only if attributes of record match one of the training examples exactly Nearest neighbor Uses k “closest” points (nearest neighbors) for performing classification

14 Nearest Neighbor Classifiers
Basic idea: If it walks like a duck, quacks like a duck, then it’s probably a duck Training Records Test Record Compute Distance Choose k of the “nearest” records

15 Nearest-Neighbor Classifiers
Requires three things The set of stored records Distance Metric to compute distance between records The value of k, the number of nearest neighbors to retrieve To classify an unknown record: Compute distance to other training records Identify k nearest neighbors Use class labels of nearest neighbors to determine the class label of unknown record (e.g., by taking majority vote)

16 Definition of Nearest Neighbor
K-nearest neighbors of a record x are data points that have the k smallest distance to x

17 1 nearest-neighbor Voronoi Diagram

18 Nearest Neighbor Classification
Compute distance between two points: Euclidean distance Determine the class from nearest neighbor list take the majority vote of class labels among the k-nearest neighbors Weigh the vote according to distance weight factor, w = 1/d2

19 Nearest Neighbor Classification…
Choosing the value of k: If k is too small, sensitive to noise points If k is too large, neighborhood may include points from other classes

20 Nearest Neighbor Classification…
Scaling issues Attributes may have to be scaled to prevent distance measures from being dominated by one of the attributes Example: height of a person may vary from 1.5m to 1.8m weight of a person may vary from 90lb to 300lb income of a person may vary from $10K to $1M

21 Nearest Neighbor Classification…
Problem with Euclidean measure: High dimensional data curse of dimensionality Can produce counter-intuitive results vs d = d = Solution: Normalize the vectors to unit length

22 Nearest neighbor Classification…
k-NN classifiers are lazy learners It does not build models explicitly Unlike eager learners such as decision tree induction and rule-based systems Classifying unknown records are relatively expensive

23 Bayes Classifier A probabilistic framework for solving classification problems Conditional Probability: Bayes theorem:

24 Example of Bayes Theorem
Given: A doctor knows that meningitis causes stiff neck 50% of the time Prior probability of any patient having meningitis is 1/50,000 Prior probability of any patient having stiff neck is 1/20 If a patient has stiff neck, what’s the probability he/she has meningitis?

25 Bayesian Classifiers Consider each attribute and class label as random variables Given a record with attributes (A1, A2,…,An) Goal is to predict class C Specifically, we want to find the value of C that maximizes P(C| A1, A2,…,An ) Can we estimate P(C| A1, A2,…,An ) directly from data?

26 Bayesian Classifiers Approach:
compute the posterior probability P(C | A1, A2, …, An) for all values of C using the Bayes theorem Choose value of C that maximizes P(C | A1, A2, …, An) Equivalent to choosing value of C that maximizes P(A1, A2, …, An|C) P(C) How to estimate P(A1, A2, …, An | C )?

27 Naïve Bayes Classifier
Assume independence among attributes Ai when class is given: P(A1, A2, …, An |C) = P(A1| Cj) P(A2| Cj)… P(An| Cj) Can estimate P(Ai| Cj) for all Ai and Cj. New point is classified to Cj if P(Cj)  P(Ai| Cj) is maximal.

28 How to Estimate Probabilities from Data?
Class: P(C) = Nc/N e.g., P(No) = 7/10, P(Yes) = 3/10 For discrete attributes: P(Ai | Ck) = |Aik|/ Nc where |Aik| is number of instances having attribute Ai and belongs to class Ck Examples: P(Status=Married|No) = 4/7 P(Refund=Yes|Yes)=0 k

29 How to Estimate Probabilities from Data?
For continuous attributes: Discretize the range into bins one ordinal attribute per bin violates independence assumption Two-way split: (A < v) or (A > v) choose only one of the two splits as new attribute Probability density estimation: Assume attribute follows a normal distribution Use data to estimate parameters of distribution (e.g., mean and standard deviation) Once probability distribution is known, can use it to estimate the conditional probability P(Ai|c) k

30 How to Estimate Probabilities from Data?
Normal distribution: One for each (Ai,ci) pair For (Income, Class=No): If Class=No sample mean = 110 sample variance = 2975

31 Example of Naïve Bayes Classifier
Given a Test Record: P(X|Class=No) = P(Refund=No|Class=No)  P(Married| Class=No)  P(Income=120K| Class=No) = 4/7  4/7  = P(X|Class=Yes) = P(Refund=No| Class=Yes)  P(Married| Class=Yes)  P(Income=120K| Class=Yes) = 1  0  1.2  10-9 = 0 Since P(X|No)P(No) > P(X|Yes)P(Yes) Therefore P(No|X) > P(Yes|X) => Class = No

32 Naïve Bayes Classifier
If one of the conditional probability is zero, then the entire expression becomes zero Probability estimation: c: number of classes p: prior probability m: parameter

33 Example of Naïve Bayes Classifier
A: attributes M: mammals N: non-mammals P(A|M)P(M) > P(A|N)P(N) => Mammals

34 Naïve Bayes (Summary) Robust to isolated noise points
Handle missing values by ignoring the instance during probability estimate calculations Robust to irrelevant attributes Independence assumption may not hold for some attributes Use other techniques such as Bayesian Belief Networks (BBN)

35 Artificial Neural Networks (ANN)
Output Y is 1 if at least two of the three inputs are equal to 1.

36 Artificial Neural Networks (ANN)

37 Artificial Neural Networks (ANN)
Model is an assembly of inter-connected nodes and weighted links Output node sums up each of its input value according to the weights of its links Compare output node against some threshold t Perceptron Model or

38 General Structure of ANN
Training ANN means learning the weights of the neurons

39 Algorithm for learning ANN
Initialize the weights (w0, w1, …, wk) Adjust the weights in such a way that the output of ANN is consistent with class labels of training examples Objective function: Find the weights wi’s that minimize the above objective function e.g., backpropagation algorithm (see lecture notes)

40 Support Vector Machines
Find a linear hyperplane (decision boundary) that will separate the data

41 Support Vector Machines
One Possible Solution

42 Support Vector Machines
Another possible solution

43 Support Vector Machines
Other possible solutions

44 Support Vector Machines
Which one is better? B1 or B2? How do you define better?

45 Support Vector Machines
Find hyperplane maximizes the margin => B1 is better than B2

46 Support Vector Machines

47 Support Vector Machines
We want to maximize: Which is equivalent to minimizing: But subjected to the following constraints: This is a constrained optimization problem Numerical approaches to solve it (e.g., quadratic programming)

48 Support Vector Machines
What if the problem is not linearly separable?

49 Support Vector Machines
What if the problem is not linearly separable? Introduce slack variables Need to minimize: Subject to:

50 Nonlinear Support Vector Machines
What if decision boundary is not linear?

51 Nonlinear Support Vector Machines
Transform data into higher dimensional space


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